Book, Chapter
1 I, V | surveyed his master with the greatest equanimity; no phenomenon,
2 I, VIII | termed the periods of its greatest eastern and western elongations—
3 I, X | himself no sailor, but had the greatest confidence in leaving the
4 I, XII | the crew behaved with the greatest courage and composure; confident
5 I, XVII | concealed that there was the greatest necessity to maintain the
6 I, XVII | wax that fastened it. The greatest care was used in opening
7 I, XXIII| Lieutenant Procope, perhaps the greatest expert in the party, accomplished
8 I, XXIV | to catch the wind to the greatest advantage, and the travelers
9 II, II | astronomer, speaking with the greatest deliberation—“to-day we
10 II, VIII | to the earth again. The greatest satisfaction he could have
11 II, XII | were carried down with the greatest alacrity, and the diminished
12 II, XIII | accordingly, by dint of the greatest care, all difficulties in
13 II, XIV | always hitherto evinced the greatest repugnance and contempt.
14 II, XV | into the project with the greatest zest, and expressed himself
15 II, XVII | was hurried on with the greatest earnestness.~There was a
16 II, XIX | them both a subject of the greatest perplexity to find that
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